Abibitumi Kasa Afrikan Languages and Liberation Network

Listen. Learn. Liberate!

Marcus Garvey asked:

"Where is the black man's Government?" "Where is his King and his kingdom?" "Where is his President, his country, and his ambassador, his army, his navy, his men of big affairs?" I could not find them, and then I declared, "I will help to make them."

Those questions are still as relevant as when Garvey first asked them. We know what his response to those were in his time. What are your responses to those questions and what will you do to help to make them???

Tags: 'tis, country, of...where?, our, where is his king and his kin…, where is the black man's gove…

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Akwaaba

First Black people have to be "De-Whitenized" or "De-Niggerized" before they can come to the realization of the importance of building a "Black government"! Otherwise it won't matter where we relocate to establish a "Black government". We'll still have the same old nigger mentality! The first step in this process is joining groups like Abibitumi Kasa Afikan Languages and Liberation Network!

Abibifahodie

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Mesi w'asEm no so dua!

I second that!

http://www.abibitumikasa.com

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My opinion, to have an army, navy etc. One/ Many must have good health. Health should be a focus for us all on some level if we are to not only be healthy enough to live, but healthy enough to engage those who intend to harm us. I feel our Kingdom is very present now because so many of us are trying to restore greatness, uncover truth, and avoid the things that have caused harm in the past [present and possible future. The more we push forward to conquer our issues I feel our men of Big affairs will be revealed thru their efforts. Peace all, Thanks for this avenue Obadele!

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Our Men and Women of Big affairs.....

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Nice update!

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Where do you think all of this will take place my Afrikan brother?

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there is already a black navy army and marines they just dont know it yet our people is joining this devils playground military corporation and is being trained and taking high ranking positions but with a slave mentality so if the masses could become de-whitenized this step is already taking so the main problem is the re-afrikanizing of a nation of chocolate white people ,its crazy when you got all these afrikan veterans and there is no training militarily in the afrikan communities to protect against white supremacy braking the chains of mental slavery is a must

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Where do you think this de-whitenization will take place?

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Right here at ABIBITUMI KASA AFRIKAN LIBERATION INSTITUTE and in our interactions offline when we organize to meet and build with Afrikans that we met here....we have to have an avenue to meet initially but alot of this work must be done in realtime and we have to commit ourselves to that responsibility....

Mut Melanin Goddezz.

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I think we need to find ways to develop any and every form of community and began to learn the process of governance, be it centralized or decentralized.

This can began with what are deemed as Intentional communities or communes, co-housing, small farming collectives, and there may even be a possibility of constructing and chartering small rural townships.

People of like mind and the same interest may be able to in time develop such groupings and help each other survive and develop further (it’s done all the time). Even if we develop housing development organizations and take dilapidated sections of our own communities that nobody wants and gentrify our own neighborhoods, this would be a step forward. And whole block of artist housing or a block rehabbed by African-centered people who want to urban garden and collectively unite to orchestrate a self-sustainable enclave.

We might need to crawl a few feet so we can stand on our feet and walk, but we need to start slowly moving forward.

The Brother who started the Yoruba township in South Carolina took a big step, and is example of a maverick...

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Do you think that Oyotunji is an example and therefore advocate the intentional communities occurring here in amerikkka or whereever we as Afrikan people are.

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Brother Obadele, you are on point.

We were originally the salt of the earth, and as archaeologist find more and more of our people (Africoids) in some of the oldest burial grounds, and our likeness carved on the oldest monuments all over the world, it obvious when we left the motherland we went to settle and advance every earth-culture and continent eons ago, this proves it’s not unusual for us to develop high civilizations wherever we are.

We are in the Diaspora by the millions, and even if we in the Diaspora and our Brother and Sisters in the continent designed an unprecedented repatriation plan it would take centuries to properly and effectively repatriate those many Africans. The logistics of that on every level would be beyond the scope of most of our present-day brightest African intellectuals, not because they’re not capable, but because it is almost unfathomable.

We need to start developing high civilizations right now, where every we are including the motherland, for we greatly need stability as a people.

Sometimes we forget; what is there to fight for, when you feel you have very little to protect?

Right now you can hardly research or Google the terms African, or Black people, and intentional communities, communes, solar energy, organic farming, and many other eco-friendly, non-exploitive, and civilized living arrangements and get much pertinent information (eco-friendly and African civilization should be synonymous).

At this point in our history we should be by definition the most self-sustaining, green-building, homesteading, communal, and alternative living people on the planet (I’m using popularized terms)!

What many groups like the Oyotunji village did was the vanguard movement, even the Ben Ammi - Kingdom Of Yah African Hebrews here and in Dimona, and the MOVE collective are examples of Black people risking being free. Sure many of these groups are not perfect, made mistakes, and have beliefs we do not necessarily agree with, but there is no perfect way to get free, to go to the edge, to take a calculated risk, or step out on a limb. All of these Sisters and Brothers have and are doing something we can learn from and we should move forward from there.


Peace

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Created by Obadele Kwame Kambon May 6, 2008 at 11:28pm. Last updated by Obadele Kwame Kambon Oct 7.

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